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Dangerous

 
Album Review: Dangerous

  • Artist: Michael Jackson
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1991
  • Total Time: 77:10
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

Despite the success of Bad, it was hard not to view it as a bit of a letdown, since it presented a cleaner, colder, calculated version of Thriller -- something that delivered what it should on the surface, but wound up offering less in the long run. So, it was time for a change-up, something even a superstar as huge as Michael Jackson realized, so he left Quincy Jones behind, hired Guy mastermind Teddy Riley as the main producer, and worked with a variety of other producers, arrangers, and writers, most notably Bruce Swedien and Bill Bottrell. The end result of this is a much sharper, harder, riskier album than Bad, one that has its eyes on the street, even if its heart gets middle-class soft on "Heal the World." The shift in direction and change of collaborators has liberated Jackson, and he's written a set of songs that is considerably stronger than Bad, often approaching the consistency of Off the Wall and Thriller. If it is hardly as effervescent or joyous as either of those records, chalk it up to his suffocating stardom, which results in a set of songs without much real emotional center, either in their substance or performance. But, there's a lot to be said for professional craftsmanship at its peak, and Dangerous has plenty of that, not just on such fine singles as "In the Closet," "Remember the Time," or the blistering "Jam," but on album tracks like "Why You Wanna Trip on Me." No, it's not perfect -- it has a terrible cover, a couple of slow spots, and suffers from CD-era ailments of the early '90s, such as its overly long running time and its deadening Q Sound production, which sounds like somebody forgot to take the Surround Sound button off. Even so, Dangerous captures Jackson at a near-peak, delivering an album that would have ruled the pop charts surely and smoothly if it had arrived just a year earlier. But it didn't -- it arrived along with grunge, which changed the rules of the game nearly as much as Thriller itself. Consequently, it's the rare multi-platinum, number one album that qualifies as a nearly forgotten, underappreciated record. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Jam Michael Jackson, René Moore, Teddy Riley, Bruce Swedien Michael Jackson (05:38)
Why You Wanna Trip on Me (Lyrics) Bernard Belle, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (05:24)
In the Closet Michael Jackson, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (06:31)
She Drives Me Wild Michael Jackson, Aqil Davidson, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (03:41)
Remember the Time Michael Jackson, Bernard Belle, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (04:00)
Can't Let Her Get Away Michael Jackson, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (04:58)
Heal the World Michael Jackson, Marty Paich Michael Jackson (06:24)
Black or White Michael Jackson, Bill Bottrell Michael Jackson (04:16)
Who Is It Michael Jackson Michael Jackson (06:34)
Give in to Me Michael Jackson, Bill Bottrell Michael Jackson (05:29)
Will You Be There Michael Jackson Michael Jackson (07:40)
Keep the Faith Siedah Garrett, Michael Jackson, Glen Ballard Michael Jackson (05:57)
Gone Too Soon (Lyrics) Marty Paich, Larry Grossman, Buz Kohan Michael Jackson (03:22)
Dangerous Michael Jackson, Bill Bottrell, Teddy Riley Michael Jackson (06:59)

Credits

Sandra Crouch (Arranger), Sandra Crouch (Choir Arrangement), Siedah Garrett (Vocals (Background)), Michael Jackson (Arranger), Michael Jackson (Director), Michael Jackson (Vocals), Michael Jackson (Vocals (Background)), Michael Jackson (Producer), Michael Jackson (Soprano (Vocal)), Michael Jackson (Main Performer), Michael Jackson (Liner Notes), Michael Jackson (Executive Producer), Michael Jackson (Vocal Arrangement), Michael Jackson (Rhythm Arrangements), René Moore (Arranger), René Moore (Keyboards), Bryan Loren (Percussion), Bryan Loren (Drums), Bryan Loren (Moog Synthesizer), Bryan Loren (Moog Bass), Shanice Wilson (Vocals (Background)), Shanice (Vocals (Background)), Elaine Anderson (Assistant Engineer), Andraé Crouch (Arranger), Andraé Crouch (Vocals), Andraé Crouch (Choir Arrangement), John Bahler (Arranger), John Bahler (Vocals), John Bahler (Vocal Arrangement), John Bahler (Choir Arrangement), Glen Ballard (Arranger), John Barnes (Bass), John Barnes (Keyboards), George DelBarrio (Arranger), George DelBarrio (String Arrangements), Michael Boddicker (Synthesizer), Michael Boddicker (Keyboards), Michael Boddicker (Programming), Michael Boddicker (Sequencing), Michael Boddicker (Keyboard Programming), Michael Boddicker (Sequencers), Dan Bosworth (Assistant Engineer), Bill Bottrell (Synthesizer), Bill Bottrell (Bass), Bill Bottrell (Guitar), Bill Bottrell (Percussion), Bill Bottrell (Drums), Bill Bottrell (Lyricist), Bill Bottrell (Producer), Bill Bottrell (Engineer), Bill Bottrell (Mellotron), Bill Bottrell (Mixing), William Bottrell (Synthesizer), William Bottrell (Bass), William Bottrell (Guitar), William Bottrell (Percussion), William Bottrell (Drums), William Bottrell (Mellophonium), William Bottrell (Producer), William Bottrell (Engineer), Brad Buxer (Synthesizer), Brad Buxer (Bass), Brad Buxer (Percussion), Brad Buxer (Arranger), Brad Buxer (Drums), Brad Buxer (Keyboards), Brad Buxer (Programming), Brad Buxer (Vocals), Brad Buxer (Keyboard Programming), Brad Buxer (Keyboard Arrangements), Wayne Cobham (Programming), Wayne Cobham (Sequencing), Larry Corbett (Cello), Larry Corbett (Soloist), Paulinho Da Costa (Percussion), Richard Cottrell (Engineer), Aqil Davidson (Lyricist), Matt Forger (Engineer), Matt Forger (Mixing), Matt Forger (Sound Design), Kevin Gilbert (Programming), Kevin Gilbert (Engineer), Kevin Gilbert (Sequencing), Endre Granat (Conductor), Endre Granat (Concert Master), Bernie Grundman (Mastering), Linda Harmon (Vocals), Linda Harmon (Soprano (Vocal)), Jerry Hey (Arranger), Jean-Marie Horvat (Engineer), Jean-Marie Horvat (Mixing), Paul Jackson, Jr. (Guitar), Terry Jackson (Bass), Terry Jackson (Guitar (Bass)), Louis Johnson (Bass), Louis Johnson (Guitar (Bass)), L.T.B. (Vocals), L.T.B. (Rap), Abraham Laboriel (Bass), Christa Larson (Vocals), Christa Larson (Soloist), Julie Last (Assistant Engineer), Rhett Lawrence (Synthesizer), Rhett Lawrence (Percussion), Rhett Lawrence (Arranger), Rhett Lawrence (Drums), Rhett Lawrence (Programming), Rhett Lawrence (Synthesizer Programming), Johnny Mandel (Arranger), Johnny Mandel (Conductor), Johnny Mandel (Orchestration), Marty Paich (Arranger), Marty Paich (Conductor), Marty Paich (Vocals), Marty Paich (Orchestration), Jasun Martz (Keyboards), Andres McKenzie (Voices), Andres McKenzie (Performer), David Paich (Synthesizer), David Paich (Arranger), David Paich (Keyboards), David Paich (Programming), David Paich (Rhythm Arrangements), David Paich (Keyboard Programming), David Paich (Keyboard Arrangements), Jeff Porcaro (Drums), Greg Phillinganes (Keyboards), Greg Phillinganes (Rhythm Arrangements), Tim Pierce (Guitar), Steve Porcaro (Synthesizer), Steve Porcaro (Keyboards), Steve Porcaro (Programming), Steve Porcaro (Keyboard Programming), Teddy Riley (Synthesizer), Teddy Riley (Guitar), Teddy Riley (Arranger), Teddy Riley (Drums), Teddy Riley (Keyboards), Teddy Riley (Vocals), Teddy Riley (Vocals (Background)), Teddy Riley (Producer), Teddy Riley (Engineer), Teddy Riley (?), Teddy Riley (Mixing), Teddy Riley (Rhythm Arrangements), Teddy Riley (Synthesizer Arrangements), Thom Russo (Engineer), Thom Russo (Assistant Engineer), Slash (Guitar), Barton Stevens (Assistant Engineer), Bruce Swedien (Percussion), Bruce Swedien (Arranger), Bruce Swedien (Drums), Bruce Swedien (Keyboards), Bruce Swedien (Vocals), Bruce Swedien (Vocals (Background)), Bruce Swedien (Producer), Bruce Swedien (Engineer), Bruce Swedien (Mixing), David Williams (Guitar), Kai Winding (Keyboard Programming), Rail Jon Rogut (Assistant Engineer), Nancy Donald (Art Direction), Craig Brock (Assistant Engineer), Craig Brock (Assistant), Jai Winding (Bass), Jai Winding (Piano), Jai Winding (Keyboards), Jai Winding (Programming), Mark Ryden (Art Direction), Mark Ryden (Illustrations), John Chamberlin (Assistant Engineer), Jim Mitchell (Engineer), Ashley Farrell (Voices), Ashley Farrell (?), George Szell (Conductor), Brad Sundberg (Assistant Engineer), Robert Shaw (Director), Dave Way (Engineer), Dave Way (Mixing), David E. Williams (Guitar), Buz Kohan (Lyricist), Heavy D (Vocals), Heavy D (Rap), Big Bush (Clothing/Wardrobe), Karen Faye (Make-Up), Michael Jackson (Arranger), Michael Jackson (Vocals), Michael Jackson (Vocals (Background)), Michael Jackson (Lyricist), Michael Jackson (Producer), Michael Jackson (Engineer), Michael Jackson (Soprano (Vocal)), Michael Jackson (Liner Notes), Michael Jackson (Vocal Arrangement), Michael Jackson (Mixing), Michael Jackson (Rhythm Arrangements), Michael Jackson (Soloist), Michael Jackson (Direction), Michael Jackson (Duet)
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Wikipedia: Dangerous (album)
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Dangerous
Studio album by Michael Jackson
Released November 22, 1991
Recorded June 25, 1990 - October 29, 1991
Genre R&B, Hard rock, Pop, new jack swing[1]
Length 76:58
Label Epic
EK-45400
Producer Michael Jackson
Teddy Riley
Bill Bottrell
Professional reviews
Michael Jackson chronology
Bad
(1987)
Dangerous
(1991)
HIStory
(1995)
2001 Special Edition
The slipcover for the Special Edition of the album. Current pressings of the special edition do not include the slipcover.
Singles from Dangerous
  1. "Black or White"
    Released: October 11, 1991
  2. "Remember the Time"
    Released: February 3, 1992
  3. "In the Closet"
    Released: April 20, 1992
  4. "Jam"
    Released: July 13, 1992 (US)
    September 1992 (EU)
  5. "Who Is It"
    Released: August 31, 1992
  6. "Heal the World"
    Released: November 23, 1992
  7. "Give In to Me"
    Released: February 15, 1993
  8. "Will You Be There"
    Released: June 28, 1993
  9. "Gone Too Soon"
    Released: December 6, 1993
  10. "Dangerous (cancelled)"
    Released: December 1993 (cancelled)

Dangerous is a studio album by Michael Jackson, released on November 22, 1991. It became his second to debut at #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart, where it spent the next four consecutive weeks. In the space of 17 years, the album has sold over 32 million copies worldwide, with 7 million certified shipments in the United States alone, making it a faster selling album than his previous record Bad. The album won one Grammy for Best Engineered Album - Non Classical won by Bruce Swedien & Teddy Riley[2] and is the most successful New Jack Swing album of all time.[3] Dangerous was the first album ever to spawn eight consecutive UK Top 20 hits. "Dangerous" is Michael Jackson's second best-selling album (the first being Thriller).

Contents

Project

According to the sleeve notes on the later remastered edition of the album, recording sessions began in Los Angeles, California at Ocean Way/Record One Studio 2 on June 25, 1990. The sessions ended at Larrabee North and Ocean Way Studio on October 29, 1991, being the most extensive recording project of Jackson's career at the time (over 16 months compared to the usual 6 spent for his previous three studio albums).

In March 1991, Jackson signed a 15 year, 6 album deal to Sony Music. The press reported that Sony actually handed over $1 billion to Jackson, but that was not the case. At the time, Sony estimated that if the albums Jackson released under the new contract sold at the same level they currently sold, it would generate over $1 billion in profits for them. Additionally, Jackson was awarded the highest royalty rate in the business. By the time the contract expired in March 2006, Michael would have been paid $45 million from Sony ($1 million a year, plus $5 million per album delivered). This does not include money he would have also earned from sales of albums, singles, videos etc. Under this contract, Jackson is estimated to have earned $175 million from album sales alone.

At this point, Dangerous was already in the making, under the producing talents of (Quincy Jones recommended) 22 year old New Jack Swing inventor Teddy Riley and Grammy-winner Bill Bottrell. The previous album, Bad, was Jackson's last designed for the LP industry, conforming to the usual 10-song within 50-minute format, whereas Dangerous was a 77-minute, 14-track compilation, which almost dared the capacity of early Nineties compact discs. Consequently, the record was released as a double album in vinyl.

The album was initially released in a large box with a picture of Jackson's eyes, which folded open to reveal the normal cover (painted by pop surrealist Mark Ryden), in pop-up card, with the CD and booklet in the bottom.

Dangerous was a highly anticipated album, as shown by an incident at the Los Angeles International Airport, where a group of armed robbers stole 30,000 copies before its official release. Because of this, more early copies of the album were released in several countries on November 21 followed by the official November 26 release date.[4]

The album also spawned a worldwide concert tour, The Dangerous Tour.

Commercial reception

Dangerous was released on November 22, 1991 with record-breaking sales. Dangerous was Jackson's fastest-selling album ever in the United States with four million shipped in under two months. This broke the sales record for Bad in 1987, in twice as many months, but the same circulation.

Dangerous also debuted at #1 on the Billboard Hot 200 Album Charts with 326,500 copies sold in one week of release. It also managed to stay in the Top 10 for a week in the 65th week, reaching #10 after Jackson received the Grammy Legend Award at the 1993 Grammy Awards. The album received a huge boost in sales in 1993 when he performed at the Super Bowl and was interviewed by Oprah Winfrey. This meant Dangerous spent 117 weeks inside the Billboard 200, thirty weeks over Bad. The RIAA certified Dangerous 7x platinum, for shipping 7 million copies.[5]

In the United Kingdom, the album was even more successful. It debuted at #1, holding off U2's Achtung Baby, but in the second week it was replaced by Queen's Greatest Hits II. Dangerous spent 23 weeks in the Top 10 right up until the 69th week and a total of 96 weeks inside the Top 75.

In worldwide sales, in the UK and US, Bad were 48% of the total worldwide sales. For Dangerous, it is 33%, making it more successful globally (not just restricted to those two regions). The singles from Dangerous were mostly bigger hits in Europe and Australia and more were released than Bad. These were spectacular sales records compared to Jackson's earlier two albums, Thriller and Bad in many European countries and Australia. Dangerous sold very well in both Asia and South America, two emerging and growing record markets.

"Black or White" was produced and co-written by Bill Bottrell and was an instant success. It was, in fact, the biggest hit single since 1982's "Billie Jean". Other singles were successful too, and in all, nine singles were released. "Dangerous" itself, was planned for a single at the end of 1993 but canceled due to the child molestation allegations, and was the same number of singles as Bad. Despite this, "Dangerous" has been performed on stage in since the second leg of the Dangerous Tour towards Jackson's last concert at the Apollo Theatre in 2002. All nine singles were released in the UK, seven reaching the Top 10 - an achievement Jackson had never made before. The major successes from the album were "Black or White", "Remember the Time", "In the Closet", "Heal the World", "Who Is It", "Give In To Me" and "Will You Be There".

The album was supported by the Dangerous World Tour. Prior to the release of Jackson's next studio album, HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I, Dangerous had already sold over twenty-two million copies worldwide.[6] In the space of 17 years, sources estimate the record has sold between 30 and 32 million copies worldwide making it a faster selling album than his previous record Bad.[7][8]

Critical Reception

Grammy Awards[2][9]

Year Nominated work Award Result
1993 Dangerous Best Engineered - Non Classical Won
"Black Or White" Best Pop Vocal Performance - Male Nominated
"Jam" Best R&B Vocal Performance - Male Nominated
"Jam" Best R&B Song Nominated

Music videos

As was becoming the standard for Jackson, the album's music videos were among the most costly and innovative of their time. Several of the music videos taken from the Dangerous album had complex storylines and dance sequences, and featured cameo appearances by celebrities. The video for "Jam", directed by David Kellogg, showed Jackson and Michael Jordan playing basketball and dancing together, while "Remember the Time", directed by John Singleton, was set in an Ancient Egyptian palace, and starred Eddie Murphy, Magic Johnson and Iman. "In the Closet" featured Jackson and supermodel Naomi Campbell as lovers. The director of the video was photographer Herb Ritts, who also photographed Jackson in a series of promotional shots for the release of the Dangerous album. The video clip for "Who Is It" is notable as it was directed by David Fincher who later went on direct a number of films including Se7en, Fight Club and Zodiac.

"Black or White" was originally over ten minutes long, premiering simultaneously on November 14, 1991 on MTV, VH1, BET, and FOX. The video featured one of the earliest examples of computer-generated morphing. The last four minutes of the video also induced much controversy, as it depicted Jackson smashing store windows and destroying a car with a crowbar. Jackson said this destructive behaviour was intended to imply a message of anti-racism and racist graffiti was added in later versions to make the violence more understandable. The music video was also controversial because of Jackson's sexually suggestive dance, which included the crotch grab as well as zipping up his pants. MTV and the other music video networks decided to excise the last four minutes of the "Black or White" video for all subsequent airings, and Jackson issued a statement apologizing to anyone who had been offended, and explaining that he tried to interpret the animal instinct of panthers into a dance. The video featured Macaulay Culkin and an appearance during the morphing scene by young Tyra Banks and was directed by John Landis, also the director of the "Thriller" short film.

Special editions

Alternative editions of the albums became very rare, products almost exclusive for record collectors. The most notable was an edition released in 1992 that folded out to become a diorama.

An international re-release of the album (entitled Dangerous - Special Edition) took place on October 16, 2001, just two weeks before the release of Jackson's studio album Invincible. Simultaneously, Special Editions of Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad were also released. For the occasion, Dangerous was digitally remastered and included a slipcase and a brand new 24-page colorful booklet with revised artwork and previously-unseen photos. The new edition managed to reach #108 in the UK charts (the only one of those four re-releases that didn't enter the Top 75 there). Because of the constraints of Dangerous' running time, previously unreleased songs were not included, however many of them were eventually leaked onto the internet along with various demos of other tracks that appeared on the album. In 2004, some of these leaked tracks were officially released on Michael Jackson: The Ultimate Collection (namely the "Dangerous" demo and "Monkey Business").

Track listing

Dangerous
# Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Jam"   René Moore, Bruce Swedien, Michael Jackson, Teddy Riley 5:39
2. "Why You Wanna Trip on Me"   Riley, Bernard Belle 5:24
3. "In the Closet"   Jackson, Riley 6:31
4. "She Drives Me Wild"   Jackson, Riley, rap lyrics by Aquil Davidson 3:41
5. "Remember the Time"   Riley, Jackson, Belle 4:00
6. "I Can't Let Her Get Away"   Jackson, Riley 4:59
7. "Heal the World"   Jackson 6:25
8. "Black or White" (feat. Slash on guitar) Jackson, rap lyrics by Bill Bottrell 4:14
9. "Who Is It"   Jackson 6:34
10. "Give In to Me" (feat. Slash on guitar) Jackson, Bottrell 5:29
11. "Will You Be There (Theme from Free Willy)"   Jackson 7:39
12. "Keep the Faith"   Glen Ballard, Siedah Garrett, Jackson 5:57
13. "Gone Too Soon"   Larry Grossman, Buz Kohan 3:22
14. "Dangerous"   Jackson, Bottrell, Riley 6:59

Singles

  1. October 1991 - "Black or White" U.S. #1 / UK #1
  2. January 1992 - "Remember the Time" U.S. #3 / UK #3
  3. April 1992 - "In the Closet" U.S. #6 / UK #8
  4. July 1992 (U.S.); September 1992 (UK) - "Jam" U.S. #26 / UK #12
  5. August 1992 (Europe); February 1993 (U.S.) - "Who Is It" U.S. #14 / UK #10
  6. October 1992 - "Heal the World" U.S. #27 / UK #2
  7. February 1993 - "Give In to Me" UK #2 (Europe only single)
  8. May 1993 - "Will You Be There" U.S. #7 / UK #8
  9. November 1993 - "Gone Too Soon" UK #33 (UK only single)

Certifications

Country Certification Sales
Australia 9x Platinum 630,000 [10]
Austria 4x Platinum 80,000 [11]
Brazil 2x platinum 600,000 [12]
Canada 6x Platinum 600,000 [13]
Finland Platinum 61,896 [14]
Germany 4x Platinum 2,000,000 [15]
Hungary Platinum 6,000 [16]
Mexico Platinum + Gold[17] 650,000 [18]
Netherlands 3x Platinum 240,000[19]
New Zealand 6x Platinum[20] 90,000[21]
Sweden 3x Platinum [22]
Switzerland 5x Platinum 250,000 [23]
UK 6x Platinum 1,800,000 [24]
U.S. 7x Platinum 7,000,000 [25]

Chart positions

Year Chart Position
1991 Billboard 200 1
Norwegian Albums Chart
Australian ARIA Albums Chart
UK Albums Chart
1992 Billboard 200
Norwegian Albums Chart
Australian ARIA Albums Chart
1993 New Zealand Albums Chart
2009 Poland Albums Chart[26] 6
Mexican AMPROFON Top 100 Albums[27] 6
Brazil Top 10 CD ABPD 4[28]

References

  1. ^ "Dangerous". AllMusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:j9foxq95ld6e. Retrieved 2009-04-27. 
  2. ^ a b "Grammy for Bruce Swedien & Teddy Riley". Grammy. http://www.grammy.com/GRAMMY_Awards/Winners/Results.aspx. Retrieved 2009-02-25. 
  3. ^ Carter, Kelley L. (2008-08-11). "New jack swing". Chicago Tribune. http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/arts/chi-5-things-0810aug10,0,1329158.story. Retrieved 2008-08-21. 
  4. ^ "Flashbacks!". beach-bulletin.com. http://www.beach-bulletin.com/news/articles.asp?articleID=3195. Retrieved 2007-06-30. 
  5. ^ "Gold and Platinum". Recording Industry Association of America. http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH_RESULTS&artist=Michael%20Jackson&format=ALBUM&go=Search&perPage=100. Retrieved 2008-04-27. 
  6. ^ Levis, Mike: Asia Pacific: The Media at Large, page 68. Billboard magazine (May 20, 1995).
  7. ^ "Michael Jackson BBC Obituary". BBC.com. 2009-06-26. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4612963.stm. Retrieved 2009-07-03. 
  8. ^ "Michael Jackson sulla sedia a rotelle". AffarItaliani.it. 2008-07-11. http://www.affaritaliani.it/entertainment/micheal-jackson110708.html. Retrieved 2009-05-10. 
  9. ^ "Grammy Awards 1993". Rock On The Net. http://www.rockonthenet.com/archive/1993/grammys.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-12. 
  10. ^ Australian Record Industry Association (ARIA)
  11. ^ [1]
  12. ^ [2]
  13. ^ Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA): Certification Results
  14. ^ IFPI
  15. ^ Bundesverband Musikindustrie
  16. ^ [3]
  17. ^ [4]
  18. ^ [5]
  19. ^ [6]
  20. ^ New Zealand Certification
  21. ^ New Zealand Chart Facts
  22. ^ [7]
  23. ^ [8]
  24. ^ [9]
  25. ^ [10]
  26. ^ http://olis.onyx.pl/listy/index.asp?lang=pl
  27. ^ Mexican Albums Chart Week 29 - 2009
  28. ^ July 6 - July 12, 2009

See also

Preceded by
Achtung Baby by U2
Billboard 200 number-one album
December 14, 1991 - January 10, 1992
Succeeded by
Nevermind by Nirvana
Preceded by
We Can't Dance by Genesis
UK number one album
November 30, 1991 – December 6, 1991
Succeeded by
Greatest Hits II by Queen
Preceded by
Achtung Baby by U2
Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
December 8, 1991 - January 17, 1992
Succeeded by
Soul Deep by Jimmy Barnes
Preceded by
Waking Up the Neighbours by Bryan Adams
Swiss Albums Chart number-one album
December 1, 1991 - December 21, 1991
Succeeded by
Greatest Hits II by Queen

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